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Peter Armitage

 
Statistics Dictionary: Peter Armitage

(1924–  ; b. Huddersfield, England) English medical statistician. Armitage studied mathematics at Cambridge U from 1941 to 1943. He was then recruited into the Ministry of Supply, encountering practical statistics whilst working alongside Barnard. In 1946 he returned to complete his studies at Cambridge. In 1947 he joined the Medical Research Council at LSHTM, where he became Professor of Medical Statistics in 1961. He succeeded Bartlett as Professor of Biomathematics at Oxford U in 1976, retiring in 1990. He was President of the IBS in 1972, editing the Society's journal Biometrics from 1980 to 1984, and becoming an Honorary Life Member of the Society in 1998. He was President of the RSS in 1982, and is one of only two individuals (the other being Plackett) to have a complete set of Guy Medals (Bronze in 1962, Silver in 1978, Gold in 1990). He was President of the ISCB in 1990.



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Peter Armitage (born 15 July 1924) is a statistician specialising in medical statistics.

Peter Armitage attended Huddersfield College and went on to read mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge. Armitage belonged to the generation of mathematicians who came to maturity in the Second World War. He joined the weapons procurement agency, the Ministry of Supply where he worked on statistical problems with George Barnard.

After the war he resumed his studies and then worked as a statistician for the Medical Research Council from 1947-61. From 1961-76 he was Professor of Medical Statistics at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine where he succeeded Austin Bradford Hill. He moved to Oxford as Professor of Biomathematics and became Professor of Applied Statistics and head of the new Department of Statistics, retiring in 1990. He was president of the Royal Statistical Society in 1982-4. He was president of the International Society for Clinical Biostatistics in 1990-1991. He is editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia of Biostatistics. He lives in Wallingford, Oxfordshire.

Biography

Basic career information is in the entry in

  • Who's Who 2005

There are recollections in

  • Peter Armitage "Purposes, methods, philosophies," Significance Volume 1 Issue 4 Page 170 - December 2004
Preceded by
David Cox
President of the Royal Statistical Society
1982—1984
Succeeded by
Walter Bodmer

External links

There is a photograph at


 
 

 

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Statistics Dictionary. A Dictionary of Statistics. Second edition revised. Copyright © Oxford University Press, 2008. All rights reserved.  Read more
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